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June 18 , 2019 Jeff Hild, Redstone Center, GWU School of Public Health jeffhild@gwu

Building a Vision for Trauma-Informed Policy Making CLASP Young Adult and Maternal Mental Health Convening. June 18 , 2019 Jeff Hild, Redstone Center, GWU School of Public Health jeffhild@gwu.edu Learn More: go.gwu.edu /BCR. Alive and Well Communities (MO- Kan ). Oregon. Cincinnati, OH.

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June 18 , 2019 Jeff Hild, Redstone Center, GWU School of Public Health jeffhild@gwu

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  1. Building a Vision for Trauma-Informed Policy MakingCLASP Young Adult and Maternal Mental Health Convening June 18, 2019 Jeff Hild, Redstone Center, GWU School of Public Health jeffhild@gwu.edu Learn More: go.gwu.edu/BCR

  2. Alive and Well Communities (MO-Kan) Oregon Cincinnati, OH Washington, DC Ward 8 Health Council Dallas, TX

  3. The Power of Collaboration

  4. Universality of ACE’s Exposure in the United States

  5. Systems Driven Adversity

  6. Create Shared Vision Collaborate Across Sectors Build Upon Best Practices & Programs Foster Coordinated Efforts Share Resources & Data Promote Practice & Policy Change

  7. Activity- Identify Pathways to Resilience • What does resilience in the community and population you are serving look like? • What are the key indicators you can measure? • What additional systems need to be connected, transformed, integrated?

  8. Activity- Identifying Adversity • What are some key individual measures of adversity in the population you are serving? • What are some key community level adversities?

  9. Trauma Informed Care A program, organization, or system that is trauma-informed realizes the widespread impact of trauma and understands potential paths for recovery; recognizes the signs and symptoms of trauma in staff, clients, families, and others involved with the system; respondsby fully integrating knowledge about trauma into policies, procedures, practices, and settings and seeks to actively resist re-traumatization. SAMSHA A trauma-informed approach is designed to avoid re-traumatizing those who seek assistance, to focus on "safety first" and a commitment to "do no harm," and to facilitate participation and meaningful involvement of consumers and families, and trauma survivors in the planning of services and programs. It also requires, to the extent possible, closely knit collaborative relationships with other public sector service systems. (Harris and Fallot, 2001)

  10. Trauma-Informed Frameworks Source: Trauma Informed Oregon Source: Missouri Model: A Developmental Framework for Trauma Informed Approaches, MO Dept. of Mental Health and Partners (2014).

  11. Layers of Trauma Racism Poverty Individual Trauma Community Trauma Lack of Access Gender Inequity Historical Trauma Xeno-phobia Systemic Oppression Violence

  12. Types of Trauma Policies Source: Purtle, Jonathan (2016)

  13. SAMHSA’s 6 Principles of a Trauma-Informed Approach

  14. Trauma-Informed Approach as Policy Framework • Safety ➜ Supports for returning citizens • Trust & Transparency ➜ Implicit bias training • Peer Support ➜ Peer navigators for referrals • Collaboration ➜ Community ambassadors • Empowerment & Choice ➜ Enhance access to healthy food choices • Intersectionality ➜ Equity “Scorecard” See e.g. Bowen EA & Murshid NS (2016) Trauma-informed social policy: a conceptual framework for policy analysis and advocacy. Am J Public Health 106, 223–229

  15. Discussion • How have you (generally) incorporated trauma-informed principles into your goals work so far? • To what extent are your policy responses trauma preventive, informed, or specific? • Do your policy responses reflect the 6 principles and where are the gaps? • What are the barriers/challenges in conceiving and implementing a trauma-informed policy response for your project?

  16. Jeff Hild Policy Director, Redstone Center GWU School of Public Health jeffhild@gwu.edu, 202.994.3637 @jeffhild1, @RedstoneGWSPH, @ResilNation go.gwu.edu/BCR

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